News

Robert Mueller’s Office Produced “Draft Indictment” Of Trump, According To New Book

In an interview with NPR aired Monday, author Michael Wolff defended the claim in his book that the office of the special counsel headed by Robert S. Mueller III considered indicting President Donald Trump.

In his new book, Siege: Under Fire, Wolff claims that he obtained a document from the Mueller investigation that included in it the possibility of Trump’s indictment. The document, which he calls a “draft indictment,” outlines various legal arguments that the special counsel could use if Trump were indicted and challenged Mueller’s ability to do so. “It assumes that the president has been indicted,” Wolff told NPR. “It assumes that the president has gone into court and made a motion to dismiss the indictment on the grounds that a president cannot be indicted. And this is the response to that motion.” However, the office of the special counsel has denied that any such document exists, and is sticking to the claim that Mueller considered it unconstitutional to indict a sitting president.

While Wolff refused to identify his source, he attempted to use his previous book, Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House, as evidence of his legitimacy. “I’ve written one book that has been, I think, largely confirmed by all subsequent accounts. So I’m pretty familiar with, if not extremely familiar with, everybody I’m talking to here. And then I like to hear it a couple of times, and in the situation of people I trust of hearing things more than once, and then it gets into the book.”

Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter!

A week of political news in your in-box.
We find the news you need to know, so you don't have to.

Siege, which was released on Tuesday, was one of the most anticipated books of the summer, partially due to the success of Wolff’s previous book. Fire and Fury, provided an intimate and humiliating look into how Trump acted in the white house, often painting him as a baby who had to be taken care of by the White House Chief of Staff.

Daniel Knopf

Recent Posts

Federal Trade Commission Votes To Ban Noncompete Agreements

On Tuesday, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) banned noncompete agreements in a 3-2 vote. The…

2 days ago

California Bill Would Prevent CLEAR Passengers From Line-Jumping At Airports

A proposed bill in California would prohibit security screening company CLEAR from skipping the general…

3 days ago

Supreme Court Seems Receptive To Laws That Allow Restrictions On Homeless

On Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments over a challenge to a law allowing…

4 days ago

Arizona Republicans Block Bill To Repeal Abortion Ban On State House Floor

The Arizona House of Representatives failed to advance a repeal of the state's 160-year-old abortion…

5 days ago

After Oregon Recriminalizes Drug Possession, What’s Next For The State’s Drug Policy

Oregon Gov. Tina Kotek (D) signed a bill restoring criminal charges in cases of hard drug possession.…

1 week ago

Biden’s New Regulation Will Limit Toxic Chemicals In Drinking Water Across The Country

President Joe Biden's administration announced the first-ever national limits on toxic "forever chemicals" in drinking water. This…

1 week ago